How The Medical Establishment Lied About Vaccines Reducing Smallpox
Executive Summary
- The medical establishment misrepresents the benefits of the smallpox vaccine and uses these false claims to support vaccination.
Introduction
The claimed success of the Smallpox vaccine is a significant item used in the medical establishment’s claims about other vaccines. In this article, you will see that their claims about the Smallpox vaccine are false.
The Smallpox Vaccine Lies Are Very Similar to the Covid Vaccine Lies
Covid is the most recent example, but lying about the benefits and risks of vaccines is something the medical establishment has done consistently since vaccines were first developed.
This is explained in the following quotation from the article What Can The Smallpox Vaccine Disaster Teach Us About Spike Protein Injuries?
After decades of work, activists were able to improve the basic living conditions of the working class (e.g., through public sanitation so people no longer slept next to infectious microbes) and a massive benefit was seen in the reduction of deaths from all infectious diseases:
The medical profession however coopted the activist’s work and claimed the reduction in deaths was due to the introduction of vaccination, something not at all supported by the data (e.g., scarlet fever, the biggest killer of the era and now an almost entirely forgotten condition never had a vaccination developed for it). Since this time, the belief that medicine rescued us from the dark ages of infectious illness and that all infections can be prevented with a vaccination has become one of the central mythologies the practice modern medicine is founded upon.
This quote is from a comment on the article Dissecting The New Plea for COVID Amnesty.
n 2017 I received a Tdap booster during my last week of work as an RN before going to grad school for Nurse Anesthesia.
One week after the injection, I developed an intense neuropathy down my arm. I remember thinking that my arm felt as if it were on fire. Since I did not have health insurance (I had just left my job) I basically had to tough it out for a month before I could get the diagnosis of cubital tunnel syndrome. The doctor who evaluated me said, “These are things that just happen as we get older.” I was 26 years old at the time. After a complete overhaul of my lifestyle habits with better diet, exercise, alcohol cessation, and curiosity in how to get better, I have regained function of my arm but still have muscle wasting in my hand and forearm that I have not been able to regain.
This is medical gaslighting. “These things happen” when ABC or XYZ happens is a standard piece of advice from MDs — who are intent on covering up the side effects of drugs. One of the least reliable sources of information on the side effects of drugs is MDs — as this is the primary thing they have to offer patients.